किं चात्र बहुनोक्तेन यत्किंचित्तत्र पर्वते । स्वेदजांडजसंज्ञेया उद्भिज्जाश्च जरायुजाः । सर्वलोकोत्तरास्तत्र दृश्यंते पर्वतोत्तमे
kiṃ cātra bahunoktena yatkiṃcittatra parvate | svedajāṃḍajasaṃjñeyā udbhijjāśca jarāyujāḥ | sarvalokottarāstatra dṛśyaṃte parvatottame
But why say more? Whatever exists upon that mountain—beings born of sweat, born from eggs, sprouting from the earth, and born from the womb—are all extraordinary, surpassing those found in other worlds, upon that best of mountains.
Narrator
Tirtha: Arbuda-parvata
Type: peak
Scene: A grand ‘biodiversity tableau’ on a sacred mountain: flowering plants sprouting from earth, birds in flight, mammals near streams, insects and small beings—each rendered with a subtle divine glow, suggesting lokottara nature.
The tīrtha is portrayed as cosmically superior—its very life-forms reflect a heightened order of purity and excellence.
Mount Arbuda, called ‘parvatottama’ (best of mountains).
None.